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  • Trump Promised to Drain the Swamp

    DC Still Mucked Up

    By: Jack Lyons - Oct 02nd, 2021

    It’s been almost a year since November 2020 when Mr. Trump lost his presidential reelection bid but secretly refuses to accept his defeat.  And “the big lie’ theory continues to poison the political well being of the nation.

  • Honoring Jazz Entrepreneur George Wein

    In Tribute Michael Rosenfeld Gallery

    By: Rosenfeld - Oct 03rd, 2021

    Michael Rosenfeld Gallery had a long and personal relationship with George Wein and we remember and celebrate his kindness and spirit. In a recent letter to Michael Rosenfeld on the occasion of the gallery’s 30th anniversary, he wrote: “30 plus years ago, by chance I walked into a brownstone building on the Upper East Side. There was a sign outside that said: Michael Rosenfeld Gallery. That was the day I met you. And to say it changed my life, is putting it mildly.”

  • Hang at Shakespere & Company

    By Debbie Tucker Green

    By: Sarah Sutro - Oct 03rd, 2021

    In the playbill for Hang by Debbie Tucker Green, the setting is described as ‘Nearly now.’ How prescient the playwright is, to recognize old and new layers of fascism, terribly becoming everyday.

  • Little Girl by Sebastien Lifshitz

    French Film About a Trans Child

    By: Nancy Bishop - Oct 06th, 2021

    Little Girl, a 2020 documentary about a young French trans girl, would be a good introduction to what it means to feel you were born in the wrong body. It’s an exquisite film, a sweet story of 7-year-old Sasha, who lives in rural France with her incredibly devoted and supportive family. Unfortunately, not everyone around her is equally as understanding.

  • The Mount Calendar

    Events Update

    By: Mount - Oct 08th, 2021

    Experience the beauty and splendor of Edith Wharton’s beloved estate. The Mount is currently open Wednesday – Sunday for tours. We are open on Saturdays and Sundays in November & December. See the mansion all dressed up for the Holidays! Holiday House tours start November 27. Tours can be booked online at EdithWharton.org. Please visit our website for the latest calendar of events.  

  • Mahagonny, Komische Oper, Berlin

    Rise and Fall of the City of Mahagonny

    By: Angelika Jansen - Oct 11th, 2021

    What startet 1930 as the first opera cooperation between the playwright Bertolt Brecht and the composer Kurt Weill may well turn out to be the last big opera in the 2021/22 season. Mahagonny is being presented at the Komische Oper Berlin with Barrie Kosky as director. 

  • Lizard Boy

    Produced by TheatreWorks Silicon Valley

    By: Victor Cordell - Oct 13th, 2021

    With “Lizard Boy,” youth is served and age is respected.  This is a big tent musical that will please anyone with an open mind and a caring heart.  The auteur, Justin Huertas who wrote the book, music, and lyrics, and who plays the lead role, has fashioned an absolutely riveting theater piece that pulsates with emotion and extracts enormous empathy.

  • Letter to the Editor

    Re: "Miroirs" by Wataru Iwata

    By: Erica H. Adams - Oct 13th, 2021

    This is Wataru Iwata emailing from Japan. I’ve been working as a pianist, music composer, visual artist and recently putting more time into digital art.  

  • Hock E Aye Vi Edgar Heap of Birds

    Rose Art Museum's Ruth Ann and Nathan Perlmutter Artist-in-Residence

    By: Rose - Oct 14th, 2021

    The Rose Art Museum named Hock E Aye Vi Edgar Heap of Birds (b. 1954, Cheyenne/Arapaho) its 2021-2022 Ruth Ann and Nathan Perlmutter Artist-in-Residence. Since 2002, the Perlmutter Residency has been part of the Rose Art Museum’s longstanding tradition of promoting artists of extraordinary talent whose works address contemporary issues of vital urgency.

  • Leiber & Stoller's Smokey Joe’s Café

    At ACT-CT in Ridgefield

    By: Karen Isaacs - Oct 18th, 2021

    Smokey Joe’s is a pure jukebox musical; there is no plot and no dialogue, just the songs from this team – Jerry Leiber and Mike Stoller whose fame was mainly in the 1950s and ‘60s. Their music connected to both rock ‘n roll and rhythm and blues genres and was made popular by Elvis Presley among others

  • Mussorgsky's Original Boris Godunov at the Met

    How Do we Assess Versions

    By: Susan Hall - Oct 18th, 2021

    Alternate versions of an opera arouse controversy.The multiple versions of Verdi’s grand opera Don Carlos (Don Carlo) were a response to different productions. Terrence Blanchard adapted his opera Fire Shut up in My Bones for the Metropolitan Opera’s stage. Now we have the magnificent, original Boris Godunov.

  • Shakespeare & Company Benefit Screenings

    Speak What We Feel, a Documentary by Patrick J. Toole

    By: Shakespeare - Oct 19th, 2021

    Winner of the Audience Award for Best Documentary Film at the 2021 Berkshire International Film Festival (BIFF) and the first feature-length film project in the Company’s 44-year history, Speak What We Feel follows hundreds of students from 10 high schools across Berkshire, Hampden, and Columbia counties as they prepare to stage a full production of a Shakespeare play under the guidance of Shakespeare & Company education artists.

  • Todd Haynes Documentary Evokes The Velvet Underground

    Is There More to the Story of Lou Reed and His Band

    By: Steve Nelson - Oct 21st, 2021

    Steve Nelson was the foremost producer/promoter of concerts by The Velvet Underground in the period 1967-1970. He managed the legendary rock club The Boston Tea Party and produced shows in western Mass. at his club The Woodrose Ballroom and at the Paramount Theater in Springfield. He also designed several of the posters promoting those shows. He was an Archival Consultant to the Haynes film and provided visual materials for it.

  • Faure's Consoling Requiem at Greenwood Cemetery

    Angel's Share Concludes Its Season

    By: Susan Hall - Oct 22nd, 2021

    Andrew Ousley has just the right touch as he presens music from all time and places in surprising venues across the city of New York.  Earlier concerts at the Greenwood cemetery in Brooklyn took place in catacombs. For the performance of Gabriel Faure’s Requiem by Cantori, Ousley moved outside. The audience sits among the dead, consoled by a requiem at peace.

  • The Great Khan by Michael Gene Sullivan

    Produced by San Francisco Playhouse

    By: Victor Cordell - Oct 23rd, 2021

    Playwright Michael Gene Sullivan fills the house with laughter in addition to thoughtfulness and social reflection.  In his affecting premiere “The Great Khan,” an otherwise unassuming, middle-class, black teenage boy, Jayden, has saved a black teenage girl, Ant (full name - Antoinette), from a gang of boys. 

  • Broken Nose Theatre’s Audio Play, Kingdom

    Tells a Black LGBTQ Story With Heart

    By: Nancy Bishop - Oct 23rd, 2021

    Kingdom is an entirely LGBTQ African American story, sensitively told, and illustrates through the characters’ varied life experiences how Black gay culture is different from White gay culture. The lyrical script keeps the symbolism of the Magic Kingdom as a meaningful background theme, until the very end.

  • M. Butterfly, the Opera, to Premiere in Santa Fe

    Huang Ruo and David Henry Hwang Join Forces

    By: Susan Hall - Oct 25th, 2021

    The world premiere of M. Butterfly, the opera, will take place on July 30,2021 at the Santa Fe Opera. We got a taste of its music, its story and the sound of the delicious man/girl Song. Kangmin Justin Kim is a countertenor with special tremulos and vibratos which suggest the feminine voice.  Many layers weave through the new telling to the tale made famous in its first iteration as a Tony and Pulitzer-finalist play by David Henry  Hwang. He is the librettist for the new work by composer, Huang Ruo.  

  • Cuban Pianist and Composer Harold López-Nussa 

    New England and NY Tour Dates

    By: Ted Kurland - Oct 25th, 2021

    On his vibrant and spirited third recording for Mack Avenue Records, Havana-based pianist and composer Harold López-Nussa sets out to capture that stirring sensation with an exhilarating marriage of jazz and Cuban pop music. On a global tour there are dates for Florence (near Northampton), Boston and NY.

  • Black Power in Print: Dana Chandler in Boston

    MFA Celebrates 55th anniversary of Black Panther Party's Founding

    By: MFA - Oct 25th, 2021

    On the occasion of the 55th anniversary of the Black Panther Party's founding, the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston (MFA), has launched "Black Power in Print," an online project in tandem with the Museum of Modern Art (MoMA). Comprising recently digitized materials and new interviews between artists and scholars, the archive highlights the Black Power movement’s legacy in visual culture and its resonance today.

  • Mezze Fall Menu

    Ramen to Go

    By: Mezze - Oct 26th, 2021

    As the leaves began falling to the ground, Chef was inspired to create ramen: only available for takeout! Why do ramen? It's sustainable, comforting, and delicious. 

  • Magic and Stillness

    Autumn in the Berkshires

    By: Cheng Tong - Oct 27th, 2021

    My life is mostly solitary. This is by choice.  When I returned from my first year in China to visit my daughters, I found living in society once again to be noisy.  The temple where I lived is isolated in the Wudang mountains 30 kilometers from the nearest city, Shiyan.  The temple complex sits atop the mountain, and life is very quiet, simple, and hard.

  • Berkshire Jazz, Dawning and Jeff Holmes

    Saint James Place, Great Barrington, Saturday, Nov. 27

    By: Berkshire Jazz - Oct 28th, 2021

    Known for her impassioned ballads and exciting up-tunes, vocalist Dawning Holmes was first heard in the Berkshires during the 2017 tribute to Buddy Rich. She returned the following year to perform with her husband Jeff Holmes' big band at the Berkshire Gateway Jazz Weekend in Lee.

  • The Chinese Lady by Lloyd Suh

    At Long Wharf Theater

    By: Karen Isaacs - Oct 30th, 2021

    The play by Lloyd Suh is based on Afong May, who came to the US in 1834 to “perform” for curious Americans telling them about Chinese life. May was purported to be the first Chinese Woman to set foot on American soil.

  • Shakeup at Williamstown Theatre Festival

    Mandy Greenfield Out and Jenny Gersten Back In

    By: Charles Giuliano - Nov 01st, 2021

    After seven seasons of woke programming Mandy Greenfield has resigned as artistic director of Williamstown Theatre Festival. There was a tech crew walkout last summer over brutal conditions during hazardous and stressful outdoor productions. During a production of Row in a reflecting pool at Clark Art Institute there were days of delays due to rain and thunder storms . Problems were widely reported in the media. Former artistic director, Jenny Gersten, has rejoined WTF as interim artistic director.

  • Eurydice by the Artistic Home

    Adaptation of Greek Classic by Sarah Ruhl

    By: Nancy Bishop - Nov 03rd, 2021

    Eurydice by Sarah Ruhl is the new production now being staged by the Artistic Home at the Den Theatre. It’s the ancient story of the wife who dies and the husband who tries to bring her back to the world of the living, but Ruhl tells this version from the viewpoint of Eurydice. She has written a funny, contemporized version of this love story, set somewhere nearby and perhaps in some current time.

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